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This web is where I weave my wacky.

Enjoy.

 

 

I write about all sorts of things. To see a specific category, 

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Entries from June 1, 2011 - June 30, 2011

Tuesday
Jun282011

That's Life - Fetish smetish

 

 

 

 

 

 

A friend of mine told me the other day that he had wandered into the Folsom Street Fair by mistake.

I would have loved to have been a fly in his brain at that moment.  I can't even begin to image the thoughts that would have raced around in his head.  He comes from a place very far away which has three very old and strong religions and a culture that is steeped in tradition.  And there's not a scrap of leather in any of it.

We went to Folsom a few years ago with friends who live in San Francisco.  Luckily, they had prepared us for what we were going to experience.

Don't get me wrong.  I've been around the block - so to speak - and I am far from being a prude.

Quite the opposite.

I have nothing against any fetish - foot, neck wattle, rubber, enema - do your thing.  As long as no one gets hurt, all involved are consenting, and there are no minors present, get your freak on and let your flag fly.

To quote the goddess Madonna:

 

Poor is the man whose pleasures depend on the permissions of another.

 

And so we went to Fulsom.  There was leather - a lot of it.  There was nudity.  There were handcuffs, whips and - you guessed it - chains.

The most beautiful thing we saw - which, for obvious reasons, made Fluffy Bear's day - was a pony girl and her mistress.  She was very pretty and her leather harness, bit and saddle were stunning.  There are some real artists making this leather stuff.

Her harness went around her boobs, squeezing them up and out.  She wore nothing but the harness on the top half of her body.

There was a small group gathered around her because her equipment was just as stunning as she was.  I was transfixed.  Until I saw the guy on the other side of the crowd.  He was naked apart from a leather cap, and he was looking at the pony girl and wanking.

I know your first reaction is to say that someone should have bopped him on the schnoz, or at least told him to stop but, here's the thing, that's probably exactly what he wanted - public humiliation - so the best thing to do was ignore him.

He wasn't the best looking specimen of a man.  I have no issue with nudist but Folsom is about leather, not leathery, flaccid skin.  

I don't have a delete button for that image of him in my mind.  

Next to the pony girl, he was like a white blob of bird shit on a shiny red Ferrari.

Thankfully, there was one other highlight of the day, and it was guano-free.

We were walking along when we saw a guy spread-eagled up against the wall of a building.  He wasn't tied up or anything, he was just choosing to stand there and be dominated.

The whip kept swishing through the air, expertly connecting with his skin at varying intensities, from bite to kiss.

And the dominatrix in question?

She was standing sideways, not even looking at her slave, having a very boring sounding conversation on her cellphone.

 

To read more in this series, click here.

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Tuesday
Jun282011

Being a Doggy Mama - The Elephant

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A few days ago I went to a toddler's birthday party.  

If you know me at all, you know I'm not that into snotgoblins.  But they emerged from a good friend of mine, so I thought I'd suck it up and take advantage of the chance to catch up with her, and perhaps get a slice of cake.

I spruced myself up a little, spent a full five minutes at the local gift shop finding something rugrat appropriate, and headed over.  

So there we are, outside in the yard, balloons aloft and - thank God - margaritas for the folks who met the minimum height requirement.

I'd just put my paltry little gift on the table when some guests arrived bearing the children's party equivalent of a offering by the Magi - a Nieman Marcus box.

My friend duly opened it and oohed and aahed over the contents.  There was a book with a padded cover, in bright colors.  The story was about an elephant.  And so the book came with a little soft toy.

It was a stylized elephant shape, the shape a child might draw, making a flattish plush toy, in bright fluffy fabric.

Now... you know those times where you do something stupid and your body is ahead of your brain?  

It takes a moment for your brain to catch up and, by the time it has, your body is already engaged in idiocy, in full view of all those around you.  All you can do in these situations is come up with some self-depricating humor to cover up.

And this is how I found myself next to my friend, squeezing the soft elephant with both hands, all over its little soft body, and sheepishly saying:

 

 Oh, right!  It's not a dog toy is it?  I guess there's no squeaky!

 

 

To read more in this series, click here.

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Monday
Jun272011

Divided by a Common Language - Ethical ignorance

 

 

 

 

 

I've had a lot of medical expenses this year.

Some were perhaps due to my own stupidity - like slitting my throat with a potato chip - others seemed to be caused by capricious gods toying with me - two bumps inside my lady lumps - and, last but not least, The opportunity to morph into a human pipette while we try to figure out what chemicals will still my sea of insanity.

And so we find ourselves balancing bills.

So many factors to consider. How old is this bill? How high is this bill? How soon will I be seeing this doctor again and therefore need to pay to avoid being unable to look them in the eye?

I've never had to do this much juggling... while walking a tightrope at the same time. And I've definitely never had to do it with medical bills.

I spent over ten years living in England where, apart from paying £6.30 per prescription I got filled, I never received any medical bill at all.

Flash forward to the now.

I'm sick. It's not flu or a cold or a migraine where all I need us bed rest and to not think about the meetings I've had to delay to the following week. No. This us viral. This keeps me from sleeping. This hurts at night.

So I call the doctor to get an appointment.

 

"Before I make an appointment for you," chirps the Receptionist, "I just need to transfer you to billing!"

"Why?" I ask.

 

I know why. I owe them $150. But I don't see how that's relevant to making an appointment.

 

"I just need to transfer you to billing to talk about your account and they'll transfer you right back and we can make an appointment!"

 

I know that my chances of getting an appointment today are diminishing with ever three minute window as the second receptionist cycles through calls.

 

"I'm sick. Please can I just book an appointment, and then you can transfer me."

"Don't worry! We'll be able to book you an appointment, I'll just transfer you to billing!"

 

And so my humiliation is complete.

Those of you who are in the US may not get why I'm even telling this story. Those of you who live in Europe will be either bemused, confused or appalled.

And herein lies one of the many things that widens and deepens what we affectionately call "The Pond" betwixt us.

The Receptionist definitely wasn't, in what, for her, were annoying moments with me on the phone, able to bridge that cultural gap. And I think that's what - once the embarrassment has abated - irks me the most.

She doesn't get it.

She doesn't get that healthcare should be a right. She doesn't get that, if someone really is sick, you should consider their welfare over 150 fucking dollars. And she definitely doesn't get, at 22-some years old, what it's like to sit and look at blisters on your stomach and legs and have to stop and think about what other expense you can avoid this month and, if no obvious candidate springs to mind, whether you could just get through this thing without racking up more debt at your family physician.

She doesn't get where I'm coming from at all.

And I'm coming from way, way across The Pond.

 

To read more in this series, click here.

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Sunday
Jun122011

Being a Doggy Mama - FCE Recovery Day 6

 
 
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Just under a week ago, our lives changed.
 
Puppy Dog went out to potty and, five minutes later, came limping up to his dad, his right front paw held close to his chest, and his gait severely damaged, causing him to tilt over and almost fall at every step.
 
We rushed to the vet and he sent us directly to a neurologist.
 
Turns out he has suffered an injury called an FCE - Fibrocartilaginous Embolism.  It happens when a dog is running and comes to a rapid stop, or jumps awkwardly.  Essentially a small piece of the disc comes off and gets into the bloodstream.  It then causes a blockage and the spinal chord is starved of blood.  The blood reroutes through other vessels but, in the interim, there has been something like a stroke to the spinal chord.
 
The result is paralysis.  
 
Some dogs are completely paralyzed.  The good news is that it's a neurological injury so it's about the messages getting to the right place which means that, with rehabilitation, a complete or very good recovery is possible.
 
In fact, you can usually see a small improvement in your dog each and every day.  There are videos online, like this one, that show a dog's progress through recovery.
 
Luckily for us, this is the very best prognosis it could have been considering his symptoms.  Other options would have been an exploded disc, or even cancer.
 
Still, as you can imagine, it was incredibly scary.  
 
And it has changed our lives significantly.
 
I was catching up with the second season of In Treatment the other day, which is based around a psychologist and the patients he's treating.  One of the characters said that her life had been rerouted, and that's what I feel has happened to us.  
 
Things have changed, and that's just the way it is.
 
We have to do physiotherapy with Puppy Dog on his right side four times a day, along with massage. We also have to massage his left side, because he's using that side to stay upright, walk, etc.  There is a danger that the overuse could cause a blown out knee or some other injury, so we have to keep the muscles loose.
 
Each bit of physio and massage takes about 20-30 minutes if you do it well, so consider the time out of your day.  
 
I am not complaining about our darling dog here.  What I am trying to do is describe how our lives have changed.
 
Why?  Because if you came to our house you'd see a dog limping, who is walking a little better each day.  No biggie, right?
 
Nope.
 
Finding ways to make life easier for him, and stop him trying to do the things he always has - like jump up and run to the door when there's a knock - has meant he has to be constantly supervised, and we've had to come up with processes and mitigations.
 
We now have 8 rubber-backed rugs all over our wooden floors, because he slips and can't walk.  We've built a ramp down the steps out of our back door to the yard.  There are pee pads on all his beds, because he's had accidents.  
 
Getting into the car to go anywhere is a melodrama.  Carry him to the car, try to get him to pee on the grass easement before we leave, he won't (he likes privacy to go potty).  Lift him into the car, he poops.  Take out the towel in the car, take it to the porch, get Nature's Miracle, pour it on the towel.  Get another towel and take it to the car.  Rearrange the pee pads and put the towel on top.  Decide we should have some Nature's Miracle in the car.  Go back to the house, get the Nature's Miracle.  Go back to the car.  Try to get him to sit.  Try again.  Force him to sit.  Finally leave.
 
I am loathe to mention it, but we have to also consider the costs.  Vet, emergency vet, rehab vet evaluation, water therapy,  massage.  This is going to wipe out the money we managed to squirrel away over the last 6 months.   
 
The stuff above is bad, but there are two things that make this really difficult.  
 
The first is the pressure on us, which manifests as bickering.  One of us forgets to bring X to the car, or holds him a way that the other doesn't agree with, or steps away for a moment and that's when he decides to get up and falls over, and we snap at each other.  We're both scared and angry and stressed out and tired and sad... and we take it out on each other.
 
The second is the grieving.  
 
Our boy, our beautiful, vibrant, uberfit boy, who swam and ran and jumped, is lying on the pee pad, towel covered bed in the house and he doesn't understand what's happened to him.  Will he fully recover?  You want to stay positive, but the question is in your mind anyway.  It's heartbreaking. 
 
And our little girl.  She doesn't know why everything has changed either.  She doesn't know why she can't play with him, why her humans are displaying emotions that she is tuning into, and they are not happy ones.  Her energy is down, she's tentative and much more tired than usual.  
 
 
This is hard.  This is ugly.  This isn't fair.
 
The silver lining is seeing him get a little better each day.  It's seeing his gait improve after his first water therapy session.  It's seeing him finally get over his privacy issues and pee outside with one of us holding him up by his side.  
 
It's each little thing that shows it's getting better.  
 
But, for now, it hurts.
 
And that's our story.
 
 
To read more in the Doggy Mama series, click here.
 
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Thursday
Jun092011

Memory Lane - Dad to the "rescue"

 

 

 

 

 

I've written about my mother more than once on this blog, but seldom about my father.  It's because, I suppose, my relationship with him was more complex and problematic.

But today I was catching up on the 2nd series of HBO's In Treatment, and watching a character called Walter, a high flying CEO, talk about having just gone to Rwanda to try to convince his daughter to come home.  He felt that they had a special relationship, they spoke every day, he was so proud of her.  But she'd started emailing her mother instead of him, so he suspected a problem and took six flights to go and get her to come home.  

She was furious that he had come, and refused to leave, then sent him an email once he left the camp she was working and living in, which he read back at the hotel in Kigali.  

The email said that he was domineering, obsessive, the cause of all her anxieties, that it was impossible to grow or thrive around him, that she had to get away from him and now he was ruining her only chance to free herself from him.

In Treatment is never an easy show to watch, but I am fascinated by psychotherapy - I intend to make it my second career - and watching the characters go through the process of self-discovery is gripping.  But there are times when the show reaches in and rips my heart out, especially when a scene resonates with my own life.

And this one did.

It reminded me of the time my father came to get me from Johannesburg.  

I grew up in a podunk town in South Africa and I moved to Jo-eez to study.  After that I was a bit lost, couldn't find a job and ended up taking an admin position in one of those pyramid scheme places.  It was a crap job, but it paid.  I became good friends with the other admin - let's call her Cassie - and she found us rooms to rent in a flat.

We inherited the third tenant, who turned out to be a bit of a weirdo.  He'd shower in our bathroom instead of the en suite in his room, and then walk around naked.  We just ignored him, and made sure we were never home with him without the other one present.

So one day I come home from work and, sitting on the stairs in front of the flat are my father and my cousin.  It was late, and they totally freaked me out.

My father looked like he was at a funeral.  My cousin looked exhausted.  They had driven 8 hours to get to where I was.

They took me out to dinner and I was completely stunned.  Why were they there?

My cousin told me that he had come to the flat a few weeks before, when he was on a business trip.  This was long before cellphones and we didn't have a landline in the apartment.  He hadn't left a note or anything, so I had no idea he had even been there.  

My cousin said that our flatmate had let him in and told him that me and Cassie were smoking (that was true), taking drugs (that wasn't) and that we took turns to use our shared bedroom to sleep with random men (that definitely wasn't).

My father didn't say a word throughout the whole thing.  He just sat at the table, crying softly, refusing to eat.

Instinctively, I knew that this was a defining moment in my life and that, if I went home with them, I would regret it for the rest of my life.  I would be like a broken colt, forever tamed, forever a pet.  

I explained that our flatmate was a bit nuts, told them about the naked thing, said I did not take drugs (that experimentation came much later) or sleep with random men and that, in fact, I was starting to date a really nice young guy who was an architecture student.  He worked nights at a local record store and, if they liked, we could go there together and I could introduce him to them.

(He's the only guy I ever broke up with, and it broke my heart, but that's another story.)

Frankly, I have no memory of the rest of the whole thing.  I was so stressed out until I started therapy at 25 that huge swaths of my memory are a complete blank.  My first therapist told me that that's a sign of the brain's way of coping - repression.

What I do know is that I didn't go home with them.

Oh, and one more thing.  My father refused to overnight in a hotel so he made my cousin drive them back home and I was worried that they would have an accident because my cousin was tired.  

Oh, there's another thing too.  I thought my cousin was a total Fuckwit.  

He is one of those men who likes to give other people advice in hushed tones.  Until then, I had thought that he was a good person for people to seek out when they needed mentoring, because his calming demeanour and Catholic-inspired advice may really be of help.  But I saw another side to him in that moment.  

He didn't just deal with drama, he created it. 

At no time had he given me the benefit of the doubt.  He hadn't told me he had visited, he hadn't told me what Nutjob Flatmate had said, he hadn't asked for my side of the story.

Instead he did the worst thing he could possibly do under the circumstances: he told my father.

My father, the man who told me that I would get raped if I went to the beach with my friends to watch the boys from our school surf on a Saturday.  My father, who managed to find a reason to get overemotional and cry at every family gathering, subjecting us all to some ridiculous speech about how he loved us (yes, yes, it sounds sweet, but wait till you've heard it for the 10th time).  My father who, after watching an episode of McGyver where Richard Dean Anderson went into Russia to rescue a young girl, came into my room in tears to tell me he loved me.

Now that I think about it, that was one of the very, very few times I ever challenged him.  I asked him to tell me what subjects I was taking at university at the time, and he couldn't answer the question.  Yeah, he really loved me.

My cousin reported this utterly implausible rubbish to my father, a man who watched cop shows and believed that the carnage of the streets of New York was just outside our door.  A man who shook with fear at the thought of his daughter on a beach with 15 year old boys in broad daylight.  

My cousin was a pathetic little tattle-tale.

Unbelievable.

As I write this, I realize that he deserved to have the hell of driving 16 hours with my father sobbing next to him.  He caused the situation, and it's absolutely right that he should suffer the consequences.

The only regret I have is that my mother may also have believed the ridiculous accusations made against me, and been really worried.  And even if she knew in her heart it was all bullshit, she would've been worried about the 16 hour round trip, just like I was.

So I guess I am most angry about what this trumped up drama did to my mother.

But I also know that, when they got home and she saw that I wasn't with them, her heart must have leapt.  She brought me up to fight, to get free of the tyranny of my father's strict and sexist attitude, and she must have known that my refusal to capitulate was a victory not only for me, but for her, too.

I didn't write my father an email saying the things that Walter's daughter wrote.  But each and every one of those words rings true to me.  

I ran away, like so many daughters do, to get free of my overbearing father.  It's not a particularly original life story.  Men of my father's age were "of their generation" (part fact, part excuse), but I suspect that, until we have more gender equality in our society, girls will still feel they have to run, even the ones who are young today.

Young women in my family have run into the arms of other men (marrying far too early), into the arms of volunteer organizations accross the country and even, in one case, into the arms of an aeroplane that took her to study half a world away.

Perhaps there are some boys who have to do this too.  But I think it's mostly girls - and gay boys.

We have to find a way to escape, to get out of our father's negative shadow, so we can find the sun, and blossom.

 

To read more in the Memory Lane series, click here.

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Wednesday
Jun082011

Hello from Puppy Dog - I did a very silly thing

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
Hello friends!
 
I'm not having a very good time right now.  It's all very confusing.
 
I was running in the yard with my sister the other day and then suddenly my leg went funny.  I hobbled into the house to tell Dada that something wasn't right, and he put me into the moving den and took me to see the Jab Man.  You know the one.  The one that you go and see and then he jabs you with something and it hurts.
 
The Jab Man moved my leg around and talked to Mama and Dada and then they put me back in the moving den and we went to this strange place.  When we got there they put me on a strange log and put leashes around my body!  I didn't like it.
 
Then some other lady moved my leg around and my neck from side to side and she put some weird cold silver thing on my chest and there was a very bright fake sun and lots of hairless apes all around me and I really, really didn't like it.
 
Then they took me to see Mama and Dada who looked very scared.  That's when I got really scared.
 
The lady told my Mama and Dada that I have Eff See Eeeee.  She said that I was running or jumping and a small piece of cart eel itch broke off and went into my blood and then it blocked something and then blood didn't go to my spine and then my legs went funny.  I don't really understand all that.  All I can tell you is that my right front leg won't work and my right back leg feels very weird too.
 
So then I thought it was all over and time to go home.  When I go to the Jab Man and he moves me around or jabs me, we always go home afterwards.  But, no!  Mama and Dada said goodbye and they were crying and the hairless apes took me away!  It was horrible!  I was soooo scared!
 
They took me to a big room with other dogs and I had my own cushion and pen and water and I stayed there for aaaaaaaages!  There was so much fake sun in the room and so many dogs and the hairless apes kept coming inside and taking me for potty and talking to the other dogs and taking them away somewhere.  I got no sleep at all, and I was reeeeeally tired!
 
I was freaking out.  Where were Mama and Dada?  Why was I in this horrible place?  Why were other dogs crying all the time?  I wanted to GO HOME!
 
I don't like pottying in strange places so then I had an accident which was so awful I don't even want to talk about it.  I just tried to think of nice things like swimming and big bones and my lil sis, who suddenly didn't seem so annoying anymore.
 
It felt like I was in that place for a very long time.  But then a hairless ape took me to a new place and Mama and Dada were there!  I was so happy!  YAY!
 
I couldn't walk properly and the lady was holding me with some strange thing under my tummy to help me but I tried to run to Mama and Dada anyway.
 
Then the lady hairless ape made me lie down and she talked to Mama and Dada and she moved my right front and right back legs around, which was annoying.  Then Dada did the same thing to my legs and they talked and talked and talked.  All I wanted was to go home.
 
Then Dada put some weird thing on me that goes around my middle and he stood up and somehow it helped me get up and walk.  Then Mama and Dada took me to our moving den.  I was even more happy!
 
I was so tired when I got home.  Mama and Dada moved all the stuff around in the house and put two beds right next to the soft logs where they sit and watch the bright box.  I just collapsed and slept.  
 
So now it's the next day and I don't feel right at all.  Walking is very hard and Mama and Dada walk next to me all the time and hold the thing around my middle and I don't want to go potty with one of them standing right next to me.  I waited till I reeeeeally couldn't hold it anymore.  
 
I really don't know what's going on.  My legs are there, but they don't do what I want them to.  Actually my leg is listening to me a little bit more today, but not much.  Mama and Dada keep moving my legs around - which is annoying - but they also massage me, which is nice.
 
Sometimes Mama cries.  I don't know why.  They both seem very upset.  
 
My lil sis just comes over and sniffs me and keeps asking me where I went and if it was for a long walkies and what did I see and sniff?  She's very annoying.
 
I'm very tired all the time.  So I'm going to go now.  
 
Life is weird.
 
Lots of licks and woofs, 
 
 
Puppy Dog
 
 
 
To read more in this series, click here.
 
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Wednesday
Jun082011

Puppy Talk - Ball

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mama!  Mama!  It's ball time!

...

Mama?  You just got out of bed.  You're in the waterfall room.  You're doing the bzzt thing in your mouth with the white stuff.  That means it's time to kick the ball for me while you do it! 

...

Mama?  Come on!  The ball is there!  Let's go!

...

Why aren't you doing ball time?  IT'S BALL TIME!

...

What do you mean 'go get the ball'?  The ball is right there!

...

Stop asking me to go get the ball!  The ball is there!  THE BALL IS RIGHT THERE!  Come on!  Soon you'll finish with the bzzt thing and our morning routine will be all wrong!

...

AAARGH!  You're finished with the bzzt thing!  You've ruined it!  You've messed up our morning game!  I HATE YOU!

...

Oh now you open the closet.  Oh, now you see the ball.  I was telling you where it was all this time!  You better kick it now!  You better!

...

YAY!  Chase the ball!  Grab the ball!  Bring it back!

...

Mama?  I brought you the ball.  Time to kick it again.  Kick it, Mama!

...

What?  You're stepping into the hot waterfall?  THIS IS SO UNFAIR!  I HATE YOU!  I'm going to walk away now and get back on the bed with Dada!  SO THERE!

 

 To read more in the Puppy Talk series, where Puppy Dog and Puppy Girl chat, click here.

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